Prof. Won-bok Rhie is best known to Koreans for his cartoons introducing histories and cultures of OTHER countries (major European powers + U.S. + Japan + China). That is, way before the advent of the internet as we know it, the earliest version dating back to the 80s.

The 2005 version of Korea Unmasked was simply a translated version of his earlier work on the motherland, viewed through a similar framework he had used to depict other countries.

There was a 2008 revised edition in English, which abandoned the word 'Unmasked' on its title and simply went by 'Korea.' (ISBN : 9788934932369) Although he has subsequently released 2012 revised edition for all of the Korean version of 'Countries' series including Korea, this 2012 edition was never followed by English version.

Believe it or not, back in 2008, three books of the series exclusively covering the United States have been also translated into English :

United States of America - The People (ISBN : 9788934933571)
United States of America - History (ISBN : 9788934935520)
United States of America - The Presidents (ISBN : 9788934932376)

All four English books, however, are out of print now and no longer in circulation, at least as 'new' books.

Well, that first link is a bunch of racist xenophobic nonsense!! My understanding of US politics is that most Jewish Americans vote Democratic, but Republican administrations are friendlier to Israel. The media in America often sympathizes with Gaza over Israel. So, is there a Jewish conspiracy? No more than a secret Martian conspiracy allied with the Freemasons to rule our minds. (I'm being sarcastic, in case you couldn't tell.)

And that's just scratching the surface. His stuff is more like propaganda pieces meant to stroke the Korean ego rather than actually inform anyone about Korea.

Despite probably having very limited interaction with non-Koreans, the guy presents random stereotypes as fact and scorns and ridicules other countries/races while trumpeting Korea and Koreans over everyone else. It's mildly entertaining but this theme gets tiresome quickly. Still, it's a funny snapshot for seeing how some Koreans view themselves and the rest of the world.

The scene where two black guys discuss how "diligent, tough, and successful" Koreans are was pretty funny. Talk about flattering oneself. And the constant stabs at Jews indicates some sort of scornful jealousy.